Following the Equator: A Journey Around the World. Part 7 by Mark Twain
Mark Twain was flat broke. To pay off his debts, he embarked on a grueling, year-long lecture tour that took him around the world. 'Following the Equator' is his diary of that trip, and Part 7 finds him in the lands of the Southern Hemisphere. There's no single plot, but a series of observations, stories, and encounters as he hops from Australia to New Zealand. He meets all sorts of people, from gold miners to government officials, and hears their tales of frontier life, bushrangers, and indigenous cultures. The 'journey' is both external, across strange landscapes, and internal, as Twain's famous humor curdles into something darker and more critical the more he sees.
Why You Should Read It
You should read this not for a straightforward history lesson, but to spend time inside one of America's greatest minds when he's feeling tired, cynical, and utterly brilliant. His jokes are still here—some of the descriptions of clumsy tourists or pompous speeches are laugh-out-loud funny. But what stuck with me was his clear-eyed anger. He looks at the treatment of Aboriginal Australians and the Maori with a honesty that was rare for his time, calling out the brutality and greed dressed up as progress. This Twain isn't the folksy riverboat philosopher; he's a weary man who has seen too much, and his sarcasm is a weapon. It makes the funny parts sharper and the serious moments land like a punch.
Final Verdict
This is perfect for anyone who loves travel writing but is tired of the glossy, inspirational kind. It's for readers who want their history unfiltered, served with a large dose of wit and a side of moral outrage. If you enjoy authors like Bill Bryson or David Sedaris, you'll recognize a kindred spirit in Twain's ability to find the absurd in everything. Be warned: it's not a light, breezy read. It’s meandering, packed with now-obscure references, and its structure is loose. But as a window into the soul of a complex man and the colonial world he moved through, it's absolutely fascinating. Dive in for the jokes, stay for the conscience.
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Susan Wright
4 months agoCompatible with my e-reader, thanks.
Jennifer Anderson
3 months agoThe layout is very easy on the eyes.